dwww Home | Manual pages | Find package

DIG(1)                               BIND 9                              DIG(1)

NAME
       dig - DNS lookup utility

SYNOPSIS
       dig  [@server]  [-b address] [-c class] [-f filename] [-k filename] [-m]
       [-p port#] [-q name] [-t type] [-v] [-x  addr]  [-y  [hmac:]name:key]  [
       [-4] | [-6] ] [name] [type] [class] [queryopt...]

       dig [-h]

       dig [global-queryopt...] [query...]

DESCRIPTION
       dig  is  a flexible tool for interrogating DNS name servers. It performs
       DNS lookups and displays the answers that are  returned  from  the  name
       server(s)  that  were  queried. Most DNS administrators use dig to trou-
       bleshoot DNS problems because of its flexibility, ease of use, and clar-
       ity of output. Other lookup tools tend to have less  functionality  than
       dig.

       Although dig is normally used with command-line arguments, it also has a
       batch mode of operation for reading lookup requests from a file. A brief
       summary of its command-line arguments and options is printed when the -h
       option  is  given.  The  BIND  9  implementation  of dig allows multiple
       lookups to be issued from the command line.

       Unless it is told to query a specific name server, dig tries each of the
       servers listed in /etc/resolv.conf. If no usable  server  addresses  are
       found, dig sends the query to the local host.

       When  no command-line arguments or options are given, dig performs an NS
       query for "." (the root).

       It is possible to set per-user defaults for dig via ${HOME}/.digrc. This
       file is read and any options in it are applied before  the  command-line
       arguments.  The  -r  option disables this feature, for scripts that need
       predictable behavior.

       The IN and CH class names overlap with the IN and  CH  top-level  domain
       names.  Either  use the -t and -c options to specify the type and class,
       use the -q to specify the domain name, or use "IN." and "CH." when look-
       ing up these top-level domains.

SIMPLE USAGE
       A typical invocation of dig looks like:

          dig @server name type

       where:

       server is the name or IP address of the name server to query.  This  can
              be  an IPv4 address in dotted-decimal notation or an IPv6 address
              in colon-delimited notation. When the supplied server argument is
              a hostname, dig resolves that  name  before  querying  that  name
              server.

              If no server argument is provided, dig consults /etc/resolv.conf;
              if  an address is found there, it queries the name server at that
              address. If either of the -4 or -6 options are in use, then  only
              addresses for the corresponding transport are tried. If no usable
              addresses  are  found, dig sends the query to the local host. The
              reply from the name server that responds is displayed.

       name   is the name of the resource record that is to be looked up.

       type   indicates what type of query is required - ANY, A, MX, SIG,  etc.
              type  can  be  any  valid query type. If no type argument is sup-
              plied, dig performs a lookup for an A record.

OPTIONS
       -4     This option indicates that only IPv4 should be used.

       -6     This option indicates that only IPv6 should be used.

       -b address[#port]
              This option sets the source IP address of the query. The  address
              must  be a valid address on one of the host's network interfaces,
              or "0.0.0.0" or "::". An optional port may be  specified  by  ap-
              pending #port.

       -c class
              This  option sets the query class. The default class is IN; other
              classes are HS for Hesiod records or CH for Chaosnet records.

       -f file
              This option sets batch mode, in which dig reads a list of  lookup
              requests  to  process  from the given file. Each line in the file
              should be organized in the same way it would be  presented  as  a
              query to dig using the command-line interface.

       -h     Print a usage summary.

       -k keyfile
              This  option tells dig to sign queries using TSIG or SIG(0) using
              a key read from the given file. Key files can be generated  using
              tsig-keygen.  When  using  TSIG authentication with dig, the name
              server that is queried needs to know the key and  algorithm  that
              is being used. In BIND, this is done by providing appropriate key
              and  server  statements  in named.conf for TSIG and by looking up
              the KEY record in zone data for SIG(0).

       -m     This option enables memory usage debugging.

       -p port
              This option sends the query to a non-standard port on the server,
              instead of the default port 53. This option is  used  to  test  a
              name  server  that has been configured to listen for queries on a
              non-standard port number.

       -q name
              This option specifies the domain name to query. This is useful to
              distinguish the name from other arguments.

       -r     This option indicates that options from ${HOME}/.digrc should not
              be read. This is useful for scripts that need predictable  behav-
              ior.

       -t type
              This  option  indicates  the resource record type to query, which
              can be any valid query type. If it is a resource record type sup-
              ported in BIND 9, it can be given by the type mnemonic  (such  as
              NS or AAAA). The default query type is A, unless the -x option is
              supplied to indicate a reverse lookup. A zone transfer can be re-
              quested  by  specifying  a type of AXFR. When an incremental zone
              transfer (IXFR) is required, set the type to ixfr=N.  The  incre-
              mental  zone transfer contains all changes made to the zone since
              the serial number in the zone's SOA record was N.

              All resource record types can be expressed as TYPEnn, where nn is
              the number of the type. If the resource record type is  not  sup-
              ported  in  BIND  9,  the result is displayed as described in ]8;;https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc3597.html\RFC
              3597]8;;\.

       -u     This option indicates that print query times should  be  provided
              in microseconds instead of milliseconds.

       -v     This option prints the version number and exits.

       -x addr
              This  option  sets  simplified  reverse  lookups, for mapping ad-
              dresses to names. The addr is an IPv4 address  in  dotted-decimal
              notation,  or  a colon-delimited IPv6 address. When the -x option
              is used, there is no need to provide the name,  class,  and  type
              arguments.   dig  automatically performs a lookup for a name like
              94.2.0.192.in-addr.arpa and sets the query type and class to  PTR
              and  IN  respectively.  IPv6 addresses are looked up using nibble
              format under the IP6.ARPA domain.

       -y [hmac:]keyname:secret
              This option signs queries using TSIG with the  given  authentica-
              tion  key.   keyname  is  the  name of the key, and secret is the
              base64-encoded shared secret. hmac is the name of the  key  algo-
              rithm;   valid  choices  are  hmac-md5,  hmac-sha1,  hmac-sha224,
              hmac-sha256, hmac-sha384, or hmac-sha512. If hmac is  not  speci-
              fied,  the  default is hmac-md5; if MD5 was disabled, the default
              is hmac-sha256.

       NOTE:
          Only the -k option should be used, rather than the -y option, because
          with -y the shared secret is supplied as a command-line  argument  in
          clear  text.  This may be visible in the output from ps1 or in a his-
          tory file maintained by the user's shell.

QUERY OPTIONS
       dig provides a number of query options which affect  the  way  in  which
       lookups  are  made and the results displayed. Some of these set or reset
       flag bits in the query header, some determine which sections of the  an-
       swer get printed, and others determine the timeout and retry strategies.

       Each  query  option  is  identified by a keyword preceded by a plus sign
       (+). Some keywords set or reset an option; these may be preceded by  the
       string  no  to negate the meaning of that keyword. Other keywords assign
       values to options, like the timeout interval. They have the  form  +key-
       word=value.  Keywords  may  be abbreviated, provided the abbreviation is
       unambiguous; for example, +cd is equivalent to +cdflag.  The  query  op-
       tions are:

       +aaflag, +noaaflag
              This option is a synonym for +aaonly, +noaaonly.

       +aaonly, +noaaonly
              This option sets the aa flag in the query.

       +additional, +noadditional
              This option displays [or does not display] the additional section
              of a reply. The default is to display it.

       +adflag, +noadflag
              This option sets [or does not set] the AD (authentic data) bit in
              the  query. This requests the server to return whether all of the
              answer and authority sections have been validated as secure,  ac-
              cording to the security policy of the server. AD=1 indicates that
              all  records  have been validated as secure and the answer is not
              from a OPT-OUT range. AD=0 indicates that some part of the answer
              was insecure or not validated.  This bit is set by default.

       +all, +noall
              This option sets or clears all display flags.

       +answer, +noanswer
              This option displays [or does not display] the answer section  of
              a reply. The default is to display it.

       +authority, +noauthority
              This  option displays [or does not display] the authority section
              of a reply. The default is to display it.

       +badcookie, +nobadcookie
              This option retries the lookup with a new server cookie if a BAD-
              COOKIE response is received.

       +besteffort, +nobesteffort
              This option attempts to display the contents  of  messages  which
              are malformed. The default is to not display malformed answers.

       +bufsize[=B]
              This  option  sets  the  UDP message buffer size advertised using
              EDNS0 to B bytes.  The maximum and minimum sizes of  this  buffer
              are  65535  and  0,  respectively.  +bufsize restores the default
              buffer size.

       +cd, +cdflag, +nocdflag
              This option sets [or does not set] the CD (checking disabled) bit
              in the query. This requests the server to not perform DNSSEC val-
              idation of responses.

       +class, +noclass
              This option displays [or does not display] the CLASS when  print-
              ing the record.

       +cmd, +nocmd
              This  option  toggles  the printing of the initial comment in the
              output, identifying the version of dig and the query options that
              have been applied. This option always has  a  global  effect;  it
              cannot be set globally and then overridden on a per-lookup basis.
              The default is to print this comment.

       +coflag, +co, +nocoflag, +noco
              This  option sets [or does not set] the CO (Compact denial of ex-
              istence Ok) EDNS bit in the query.  If set, it tells servers that
              Compact Denial of Existence responses are acceptable when  reply-
              ing to queries.  The default is +nocoflag.

       +comments, +nocomments
              This option toggles the display of some comment lines in the out-
              put,  with information about the packet header and OPT pseudosec-
              tion, and the names of the response section. The  default  is  to
              print these comments.

              Other  types  of  comments in the output are not affected by this
              option, but can be controlled using other command-line  switches.
              These include +cmd, +question, +stats, and +rrcomments.

       +cookie=####, +nocookie
              This  option  sends [or does not send] a COOKIE EDNS option, with
              an optional value. Replaying a COOKIE from  a  previous  response
              allows  the  server to identify a previous client. The default is
              +cookie.

              +cookie is also set when +trace is set to better emulate the  de-
              fault queries from a nameserver.

       +crypto, +nocrypto
              This option toggles the display of cryptographic fields in DNSSEC
              records.  The contents of these fields are unnecessary for debug-
              ging most DNSSEC validation failures and removing them  makes  it
              easier  to see the common failures. The default is to display the
              fields. When omitted, they are replaced by the  string  [omitted]
              or,  in  the DNSKEY case, the key ID is displayed as the replace-
              ment, e.g. [ key id = value ].

       +defname, +nodefname
              This option, which is deprecated, is treated  as  a  synonym  for
              +search, +nosearch.

       +dns64prefix, +nodns64prefix
              Lookup IPV4ONLY.ARPA AAAA and print any DNS64 prefixes found.

       +dnssec, +do, +nodnssec, +nodo
              This  option  requests that DNSSEC records be sent by setting the
              DNSSEC OK (DO) bit in the OPT record in the additional section of
              the query.

       +domain=somename
              This option sets the search list to  contain  the  single  domain
              somename,  as  if  specified  in  a  domain directive in /etc/re-
              solv.conf, and enables search list processing as if  the  +search
              option were given.

       +edns[=#], +noedns
              This  option specifies the EDNS version to query with. Valid val-
              ues are 0 to 255.  Setting the EDNS version causes an EDNS  query
              to  be sent.  +noedns clears the remembered EDNS version. EDNS is
              set to 0 by default.

       +ednsflags[=#], +noednsflags
              This option sets the must-be-zero EDNS flags bits (Z bits) to the
              specified value.  Decimal, hex, and octal encodings are accepted.
              Setting a named flag (e.g. DO, CO) is silently  ignored.  By  de-
              fault, no Z bits are set.

       +ednsnegotiation, +noednsnegotiation
              This  option  enables/disables  EDNS  version negotiation. By de-
              fault, EDNS version negotiation is enabled.

       +ednsopt[=code[:value]], +noednsopt
              This option specifies the EDNS option with code point code and an
              optional payload of value as a hexadecimal string.  code  can  be
              either an EDNS option name (for example, NSID or ECS) or an arbi-
              trary  numeric  value.  +noednsopt  clears the EDNS options to be
              sent.

       +expire, +noexpire
              This option sends an EDNS Expire option.

       +fail, +nofail
              This option indicates that named should try [or not try] the next
              server if a SERVFAIL is received. The default is to not  try  the
              next  server, which is the reverse of normal stub resolver behav-
              ior.

       +fuzztime[=value], +nofuzztime
              This option allows the signing time to be specified when generat-
              ing signed messages.  If a value is specified it is  the  seconds
              since  00:00:00 January 1, 1970 UTC ignoring leap seconds.  If no
              value is specified 1646972129 (Fri 11 Mar 2022 04:15:29  UTC)  is
              used.  The default is +nofuzztime and the current time is used.

       +header-only, +noheader-only
              This  option  sends  a query with a DNS header without a question
              section. The default is to add a question section. The query type
              and query name are ignored when this is set.

       +https[=value], +nohttps
              This option indicates whether to use DNS over  HTTPS  (DoH)  when
              querying name servers.  When this option is in use, the port num-
              ber  defaults  to  443.   The HTTP POST request mode is used when
              sending the query.

              If value is specified, it will be used as the  HTTP  endpoint  in
              the  query  URI;  the default is /dns-query. So, for example, dig
              @example.com   +https   will   use    the    URI    https://exam-
              ple.com/dns-query.

       +https-get[=value], +nohttps-get
              Similar  to +https, except that the HTTP GET request mode is used
              when sending the query.

       +https-post[=value], +nohttps-post
              Same as +https.

       +http-plain[=value], +nohttp-plain
              Similar to +https, except that HTTP queries will be sent  over  a
              non-encrypted  channel. When this option is in use, the port num-
              ber defaults to 80 and the HTTP request mode is POST.

       +http-plain-get[=value], +nohttp-plain-get
              Similar to +http-plain, except that the HTTP request mode is GET.

       +http-plain-post[=value], +nohttp-plain-post
              Same as +http-plain.

       +identify, +noidentify
              This option shows [or does not show] the IP address and port num-
              ber that supplied the answer, when the +short option is  enabled.
              If  short  form answers are requested, the default is not to show
              the source address and port number of the  server  that  provided
              the answer.

       +idn, +noidn
              Enable  or  disable IDN processing. By default IDN is enabled for
              input query names, and for display when the output is a terminal.

              You can also  turn  off  dig's  IDN  processing  by  setting  the
              IDN_DISABLE environment variable.

       +ignore, +noignore
              This  option  ignores  [or does not ignore] truncation in UDP re-
              sponses instead of retrying with TCP. By default, TCP retries are
              performed.

       +keepalive, +nokeepalive
              This option sends [or does not send] an EDNS Keepalive option.

       +keepopen, +nokeepopen
              This option keeps [or does not keep] the TCP socket open  between
              queries,  and reuses it rather than creating a new TCP socket for
              each lookup. The default is +nokeepopen.

       +multiline, +nomultiline
              This option prints [or does not  print]  records,  like  the  SOA
              records,  in a verbose multi-line format with human-readable com-
              ments. The default is to print each record on a  single  line  to
              facilitate machine parsing of the dig output.

       +ndots=D
              This  option sets the number of dots (D) that must appear in name
              for it to be considered absolute. The default value is  that  de-
              fined  using  the ndots statement in /etc/resolv.conf, or 1 if no
              ndots statement is present. Names with fewer dots are interpreted
              as relative names, and are searched for in the domains listed  in
              the  search or domain directive in /etc/resolv.conf if +search is
              set.

       +nsid, +nonsid
              When enabled, this option includes an EDNS name server ID request
              when sending a query.

       +nssearch, +nonssearch
              When this option is set, dig attempts to find  the  authoritative
              name  servers  for  the zone containing the name being looked up,
              and display the SOA record that each  name  server  has  for  the
              zone.   Addresses  of  servers  that  did  not  respond  are also
              printed.

       +onesoa, +noonesoa
              When enabled, this option prints only one (starting)  SOA  record
              when  performing an AXFR. The default is to print both the start-
              ing and ending SOA records.

       +opcode=value, +noopcode
              When enabled, this option sets (restores) the DNS message  opcode
              to the specified value. The default value is QUERY (0).

       +padding=value
              This  option  pads  the  size  of the query packet using the EDNS
              Padding option to blocks of value bytes. For example, +padding=32
              causes a 48-byte query to be padded  to  64  bytes.  The  default
              block size is 0, which disables padding; the maximum is 512. Val-
              ues  are  ordinarily  expected  to be powers of two, such as 128;
              however, this is not mandatory. Responses to padded  queries  may
              also be padded, but only if the query uses TCP or DNS COOKIE.

       +proxy[=src_addr[#src_port]-dst_addr[#dst_port]], +noproxy
              When this option is set, dig adds PROXYv2 headers to the queries.
              When  source and destination addresses are specified, the headers
              contain them and use the PROXY command. It means for  the  remote
              peer  that  the  queries  were sent on behalf of another node and
              that the PROXYv2 header reflects  the  original  connection  end-
              points. The default source port is 0 and destination port is 53.

              For  encrypted  DNS transports, to prevent accidental information
              leakage, encryption is applied to the PROXYv2 headers: the  head-
              ers  are  sent  right  after  the handshake process has been com-
              pleted.

              For plain DNS transports, no encryption is applied to the PROXYv2
              headers.

              If the addressees are omitted, PROXYv2 headers, that use the  LO-
              CAL  command  set,  are  added instead. For the remote peer, that
              means that the queries were sent on  purpose  without  being  re-
              layed, so the real connection endpoint addresses must be used.

       +proxy-plain[=src_addr[#src_port]-dst_addr[#dst_port], +noproxy-plain
              The same as +[no]proxy, but instructs dig to send PROXYv2 headers
              ahead  of any encryption, before any handshake messages are sent.
              That makes dig behave exactly how it is described  in  the  PROXY
              protocol  specification, but not all software expects such behav-
              iour.

              Please consult the software documentation to find out if you need
              this option. (for  example,  dnsdist  expects  encrypted  PROXYv2
              headers  sent over TLS when encryption is used, while HAProxy and
              many other software packages expect plain ones).

              For plain DNS transports the option is effectively an  alias  for
              the +[no]proxy described above.

       +qid=value
              This option specifies the query ID to use when sending queries.

       +qr, +noqr
              This  option  toggles  the  display of the query message as it is
              sent. By default, the query is not printed.

       +question, +noquestion
              This option toggles the display of  the  question  section  of  a
              query  when  an  answer  is returned. The default is to print the
              question section as a comment.

       +raflag, +noraflag
              This option sets [or does not set] the RA  (Recursion  Available)
              bit  in  the query. The default is +noraflag. This bit is ignored
              by the server for QUERY.

       +rdflag, +nordflag
              This option is a synonym for +recurse, +norecurse.

       +recurse, +norecurse
              This option toggles the setting of the RD (recursion desired) bit
              in the query.  This bit is set by default, which means  dig  nor-
              mally  sends  recursive  queries. Recursion is automatically dis-
              abled when the +nssearch or +trace query option is used.

       +retry=T
              This option sets the number of times to retry UDP and TCP queries
              to server to T instead of the default, 2.   Unlike  +tries,  this
              does not include the initial query.

       +rrcomments, +norrcomments
              This  option  toggles  the  display of per-record comments in the
              output (for example, human-readable key information about  DNSKEY
              records). The default is not to print record comments unless mul-
              tiline mode is active.

       +search, +nosearch
              This option uses [or does not use] the search list defined by the
              searchlist or domain directive in resolv.conf, if any. The search
              list is not used by default.

              ndots  from  resolv.conf  (default 1), which may be overridden by
              +ndots, determines whether the name is treated  as  relative  and
              hence whether a search is eventually performed.

       +short, +noshort
              This  option  toggles whether a terse answer is provided. The de-
              fault is to print the answer in a verbose form. This  option  al-
              ways  has  a  global  effect;  it cannot be set globally and then
              overridden on a per-lookup basis.

       +showbadcookie, +noshowbadcookie
              This option toggles whether to show the  message  containing  the
              BADCOOKIE  rcode  before retrying the request or not. The default
              is to not show the messages.

       +showbadvers, +noshowbadvers
              This option toggles whether to show the  message  containing  the
              BADVERS  rcode before retrying the request or not. The default is
              to not show the messages.

       +showsearch, +noshowsearch
              This option performs [or does not perform] a search  showing  in-
              termediate results.

       +split=W
              This  option  splits  long hex- or base64-formatted fields in re-
              source records into chunks of W characters (where W is rounded up
              to the nearest multiple of 4). +nosplit or +split=0 causes fields
              not to be split at all. The default is 56 characters, or 44 char-
              acters when multiline mode is active.

       +stats, +nostats
              This option toggles the printing of statistics:  when  the  query
              was  made, the size of the reply, etc. The default behavior is to
              print the query statistics as a comment after each lookup.

       +subnet=addr[/prefix-length], +nosubnet
              This option sends [or does not send] an EDNS CLIENT-SUBNET option
              with the specified IP address or network prefix.

              dig +subnet=0.0.0.0/0, or simply dig +subnet=0 for  short,  sends
              an  EDNS  CLIENT-SUBNET option with an empty address and a source
              prefix-length of zero, which signals a resolver that the client's
              address information must not be used when resolving this query.

       +tcflag, +notcflag
              This option sets [or does not set] the TC (TrunCation) bit in the
              query. The default is +notcflag.  This  bit  is  ignored  by  the
              server for QUERY.

       +tcp, +notcp
              This  option  indicates  whether  to  use  TCP when querying name
              servers.  The default behavior is to use UDP unless a type any or
              ixfr=N query is requested, in which case the default is TCP. AXFR
              queries always use TCP. To prevent retry over TCP  when  TC=1  is
              returned from a UDP query, use +ignore.

       +timeout=T
              This  option  sets  the timeout for a query to T seconds. The de-
              fault timeout is 5 seconds. An attempt to set T to less than 1 is
              silently set to 1.

       +tls, +notls
              This option indicates whether to use  DNS  over  TLS  (DoT)  when
              querying  name servers. When this option is in use, the port num-
              ber defaults to 853.

       +tls-ca[=file-name], +notls-ca
              This option enables remote server TLS certificate validation  for
              DNS  transports, relying on TLS. Certificate authorities certifi-
              cates are loaded from the specified PEM file (file-name). If  the
              file  is  not specified, the default certificates from the global
              certificates store are used.

       +tls-certfile=file-name, +tls-keyfile=file-name, +notls-certfile,
       +notls-keyfile
              These options set the state of certificate-based client authenti-
              cation for DNS transports, relying on TLS. Both certificate chain
              file and private key file are expected to be in PEM format.  Both
              options must be specified at the same time.

       +tls-hostname=hostname, +notls-hostname
              This option makes dig use the  provided  hostname  during  remote
              server  TLS  certificate  verification. Otherwise, the DNS server
              name is used. This option has no effect if +tls-ca is not  speci-
              fied.

       +trace, +notrace
              This  option toggles tracing of the delegation path from the root
              name servers for the name being looked up. Tracing is disabled by
              default.  When tracing is enabled, dig makes iterative queries to
              resolve the name being looked up. It follows referrals  from  the
              root  servers,  showing the answer from each server that was used
              to resolve the lookup.

              If @server is also specified, it affects only the  initial  query
              for the root zone name servers.

              +dnssec  is set when +trace is set, to better emulate the default
              queries from a name server.

              Note that the delv +ns option can also be used  for  tracing  the
              resolution of a name from the root (see delv).

       +tries=T
              This  option  sets the number of times to try UDP and TCP queries
              to server to T instead of the default, 3. If T is  less  than  or
              equal to zero, the number of tries is silently rounded up to 1.

       +ttlid, +nottlid
              This  option displays [or does not display] the TTL when printing
              the record.

       +ttlunits, +nottlunits
              This option displays [or does not display] the  TTL  in  friendly
              human-readable time units of s, m, h, d, and w, representing sec-
              onds, minutes, hours, days, and weeks. This implies +ttlid.

       +unknownformat, +nounknownformat
              This option prints all RDATA in unknown RR type presentation for-
              mat (]8;;https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc3597.html\RFC 3597]8;;\).  The default is to print RDATA for known types in
              the type's presentation format.

       +vc, +novc
              This  option  uses  [or  does  not  use]  TCP  when querying name
              servers. This alternate syntax to +tcp is provided for  backwards
              compatibility. The vc stands for "virtual circuit."

       +yaml, +noyaml
              When enabled, this option prints the responses (and, if +qr is in
              use, also the outgoing queries) in a detailed YAML format.

       +zflag, +nozflag
              This option sets [or does not set] the last unassigned DNS header
              flag in a DNS query.  This flag is off by default.

MULTIPLE QUERIES
       The BIND 9 implementation of dig supports specifying multiple queries on
       the  command  line (in addition to supporting the -f batch file option).
       Each of those queries can be supplied with its own  set  of  flags,  op-
       tions, and query options.

       In  this case, each query argument represents an individual query in the
       command-line syntax described above. Each consists of any of  the  stan-
       dard options and flags, the name to be looked up, an optional query type
       and class, and any query options that should be applied to that query.

       A  global  set of query options, which should be applied to all queries,
       can also be supplied. These global query options must precede the  first
       tuple  of  name, class, type, options, flags, and query options supplied
       on the command line. Any global query options (except  +cmd  and  +short
       options) can be overridden by a query-specific set of query options. For
       example:

          dig +qr www.isc.org any -x 127.0.0.1 isc.org ns +noqr

       shows  how  dig can be used from the command line to make three lookups:
       an ANY query for www.isc.org, a reverse lookup of 127.0.0.1, and a query
       for the NS records of isc.org. A global query option of +qr is  applied,
       so  that  dig shows the initial query it made for each lookup. The final
       query has a local query option of +noqr which means that  dig  does  not
       print the initial query when it looks up the NS records for isc.org.

RETURN CODES
       dig return codes are:

       0      DNS response received, including NXDOMAIN status

       1      Usage error

       8      Couldn't open batch file

       9      No reply from server

       10     Internal error

FILES
       /etc/resolv.conf

       ${HOME}/.digrc

SEE ALSO
       delv(1), host(1), named(8), dnssec-keygen(8), ]8;;https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc1035.html\RFC 1035]8;;\.

BUGS
       There are probably too many query options.

AUTHOR
       Internet Systems Consortium

COPYRIGHT
       2025, Internet Systems Consortium

9.20.15-1~deb13u1-Debian           2025-10-18                            DIG(1)

Generated by dwww version 1.16 on Wed Dec 10 21:34:13 CET 2025.